Why people thought steel houses were a good idea

It was supposed to be the future of housing. What went wrong? Subscribe and turn on notifications šŸ”” so you donā€™t miss any videos: Why arenā€™t homes made of steel? In the late 1940s, one company posed that question. Lustron was a prefabricated home that was supposed to be the future of housing. So why did it fail? For just a few years ā€” 1947 to 1950 ā€” the Columbus, Ohio-based Lustron represented the future of housing. Using a steel frame and porcelain enamel-covered steel panels, Lustron made homes in a factory and shipped them around the country. Voxā€™s Phil Edwards visited a Lustron home just outside Dayton, Ohio, to experience the unusual features, like magnetic walls, for himself. This homeā€™s quirks werenā€™t relegated to the materials. Through a combination of government funding sources, an attempt to reinvent the production cycle for home, and a unique distribution plan, the Lustron home helps explain how housing does ā€” and doesnā€™t ā€” work in America. Further reading: Tom Fettersā€™s book, The Lustron Home, is packed full of charts, graphs, original letters, and a clear and concise history of the companyā€™s successes and failures. Suburban Steel, Douglas Knerrā€™s look at Lustron, covers similar ground, but with more of an eye toward government drama and the complexities of public funding for a private business. Located in Columbus, the Ohio History Connection has a reconstructed Lustron as an exhibit. They also have online resources including the linked instruction manual. The Whitehall Historical society writes here about their reconstruction of a Lustron home. If you want to stay in a Lustron, you can. These are just a few of the Lustrons available on vacation sites like Airbnb and VRBO (including Barbara Roseā€™s home in West Alexandria). Make sure you never miss behind the scenes content in the Vox Video newsletter, sign up here: is a news website that helps you cut through the noise and understand whatā€™s really driving the events in the headlines. Check out Support Voxā€™s reporting with a one-time or recurring contribution: Shop the Vox merch store: Watch our full video catalog: Follow Vox on Facebook: Follow Vox on Twitter: Follow Vox on TikTok: @voxdotcom
Back to Top